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Neighbourhood Demographic Quotas and Limits of the Right to Sort

Lookup NU author(s): Han Kim, Dr Andrew Walton

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0).


Abstract

This paper offers a normative defence of using neighbourhood demographic quotas to deconcentrate residential clusters of advantage. It develops the case by detailing problems of inequality that arise from this kind of sorting and sketching several ways to implement quotas in residential areas. Then it challenges several objections that might support advantaged individuals establishing or maintaining sorted neighbourhoods. It does this by conceptualising a ‘right to sort’ and critically investigating possible bases for it grounded in concerns regarding residential choice, freedom of association, located life plans, and non-discrimination. It furthers its defence of limiting the rights of advantaged individuals to sort by relating the discussion to ideas about the weight of certain moral claims varying in accordance with individuals’ broader circumstances in recent thinking on the relationship between domains of morality and principles of transitional justice.


Publication metadata

Author(s): Kim HY, Walton A

Publication type: Article

Publication status: Published

Journal: Political Philosophy

Year: 2026

Volume: 3

Issue: 1

Pages: 136-166

Online publication date: 05/05/2026

Acceptance date: 13/04/2026

Date deposited: 28/04/2026

ISSN (electronic): 3033-3830

Publisher: Open Library of Humanities

URL: https://doi.org/10.16995/pp.25789

DOI: 10.16995/pp.25789


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